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SAS had golden pass to get away with murder, inquiry toldA former senior UK Special Forces officer has told a public inquiry into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan that the SAS had a "golden pass allowing them to get away with murder". The accusation ...
The closure of a military police investigation into suspected war crimes by the SAS was "inappropriate and premature", a former Kent Police chief constable told a public inquiry on Monday.
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Judge gives Johnny Mercer 10 days to name whistleblowers who told him about alleged murders by the SAS in Afghanistan or face being jailedThe chairman of the Afghanistan Inquiry, Sir Charles Haddon-Cave has given Tory MP for Plymouth until April 5 to hand over a witness statement containing the names of whistleblowers. The chairman ...
But tensions between the two now seem to have spilled over into almost open warfare amid reports SBS officers accused their SAS counterparts of having committed war crimes in Afghanistan more than ...
British military police have previously conducted several inquiries into allegations of misconduct by forces in Afghanistan, including those made against the SAS. However, the MoD has said none ...
Opportunities to establish whether SAS soldiers ‘murdered’ 84 captives in Afghanistan were lost due to failures in a military police investigation, a former chief constable has told the High ...
The allegations of extrajudicial killings by special forces are central to the Afghanistan inquiry ... capable of suggesting that members of the SAS were applying a practice of unlawfully killing ...
As part of British military support for the US-led invasion and occupation of Afghanistan (2001-2021), the SAS, like the elite special forces of the US and other NATO powers, carried out hundreds ...
Oliver Schulz has been charged in connection with the death of an Afghan man in 2012 A former Australian SAS soldier has been ... into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan. Oliver Schulz, 41, is ...
Some Australian soldiers used foreign rules of engagement in Afghanistan that may have resulted in alleged war crimes – a failing not investigated by the Brereton inquiry.
Soldiers working within the UK's special forces discussed concerns that Afghans who posed no threat were being murdered in raids against suspected Taliban insurgents, an inquiry has been told.
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